The play author Pullman is watching death from a Catholic point of view. A moral message that lives in heaven that he lives in heaven forever sets the tone of the drama. Everyone says that the soul of everyone needs to be saved before death, otherwise he will not live with God forever. The author considers death as the foundation of the human spiritual journey in the heaven and in God, or the beginning of the curse of the soul. The author calls death the messenger of God. Theater emphasizes the message that everyone treats death as he is responsible for his actions and the actions he faced.
In the drama "everyone", death is depicted as extremely frightening. Because nobody seems ready to prepare for it, death is considered to lead people far from the fun of the world. Everyone is a classic script of the 15th century, the theme is the fight of the soul. This is a moral drama, a good example of a transitory drama that links English ritual dramas to secular dramas in the late Middle Ages of England. In drama, death is considered tragic and very scary.
Death is an important person for everyone. Death symbolizes the messenger of God. He is a person descending to the ground to find the public and bring him to the world. Death is an important part of everyone as he motivates everyone to find something to accompany him in an eternal paradise or hell's journey. Everyone who begged him to be his companion will give him up. There is only one character, good deed, and insist on his words to accompany everyone. When everyone approaches God, his good deed is the only thing that can represent him. After all, everyone's soul is saved, but only God's grace can be saved. Because he and he alone decide who is allowed to enter his kingdom